Well said, Patrick. That is precisely why I decided that tempting as it is 
to want to play with, a fixie would never be anything but a novelty toy 
here in the mountains. I must say though, playing with the idea of a fixed 
gear taught me each gear has a much wider range (on the low end in 
particular) than I'd previously utilized and I subsequently shift much 
less. ALways good to play! Grin.

With abandon,
Patrick

On Thursday, May 16, 2013 7:52:40 PM UTC-6, Patrick Moore wrote:
>
> The general theme of "Just Ride" being riding without complication, 
> daunting goals, and excessive complication, I have found a niche way to 
> implement that principle: riding with multiple gears.
>
> I was tired this morning and debated briefly whether to take the car to 
> Stevie's, but decided to ride since I have the Ram which has a 35" low gear 
> -- 30/23), and because the outbound trip has a net elevation loss of 
> several hundred feet. I was tired all day and, this evening at 6 pm, found 
> myself faced with a ride just shy of 8 miles with the temp closing on 90, a 
> brisk breeze quartering against me, and the elevation to be regained that I 
> had coasted down this morning.
>
> But, no sweat! Multiple gears! Wonderful things! I got on the Ram and 
> headed south for 1.5 mile against the wind, no sweat, keeping it in the 
> 70". Turned westward onto Coronado and the gradual climb toward the Mesa -- 
> again, no sweat, dropped to the 66" and twiddled away. Crossed Loma Larga 
> where the grade turns gradually upward -- no sweat; I've got 60" and 50" in 
> the big ring. After 1/2 mile, Coronado meets the Mesa and turns viciously 
> steep. No sweat! Dropped seriatim to the 60" and, bypassing the 44/23 = 
> 50", chickened out to the 30t inner and, again seriatim, into the 45", the 
> 41", and even the shameful 30X23 or 35". I twiddled seated up the steepest 
> parts -- none longer than 1/4 mile -- seated, easy, comfortable -- except 
> for the steepest 1/8 mile where I stood because it was more comfortable. I 
> regularly clear these slopes on Riv #3 (70" fixed) and even #2 (75" fixed), 
> not to mention the lethargic Fargo (38/32 = 34"), but, tired as I was 
> today, it was hugely comforting to know that I could master these minor 
> obstacles without straining. 
>
> And the bar: 42 cm Noodle, just shy of 1" below saddle. The great virtue 
> of the Noodle, for me, is the deepish drop (140 mm) that allows you to have 
> a (relatively) high flat and (relatively) stretched hoods, with nice, flat 
> ramps, over a (relatively) low hook. I rode the flats and the ramps 
> comfortably on the gradual inclines, and was glad of the stretched out 
> hoods against the wind and when the road turned upward. I stood only for 
> 1/8 mile or so on the steepest section in the 35", not from necessity but 
> for comfort.
>
> I averaged 11.66 mph clock running including a stop at the PO to get my 
> mother's mail from her box -- including triaging some of the junk because I 
> hadn't room for it all.
>
> Altogether, a good ride, despite initial tiredness exacerbated by the g-d 
> flat. A very brief ride that, on a fixie, would have made me regret riding. 
> But with a 35" low and a bar with flat just 1" below saddle, No Sweat!
>
> Patrick Moore, excreting more words per mile than anyone else in ABQ, NM
>
> -- 
>
> http://resumespecialties.com/index.html
> patric...@resumespecialties.com <javascript:>
>
> Albuquerque, NM
>  

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